Republicans Know They're Winning on Abortion
Before the livestream of the House Judiciary Committee hearing on a six-week abortion ban started on Wednesday morning, the feed was just white noise and a dated-looking collage of the Capitol building. The repetitive drone and 1980s a.v. club aesthetic were an appropriate enough introduction to what would follow, since there is nothing new under the sun when it comes to state intrusion on the right to an abortion and the corresponding spectacle of those efforts.
The specifics have changed some since 1973, when the procedure was made legal in every state—recent years have seen a shift from the tactic of trying to ban abortion outright to a more methodical and bureaucratic erosion of access and an embrace of the language of “women’s health”—but the basic premise is always the same: Your body is not yours.
The so-called Heartbeat Protection Act of 2017 is no different. A lot has been written in the last couple of years about the strategy of the six-week ban, with some arguing that the primary function of these bills is to distract from more consequential anti-abortion measures. And it’s true that 20-week bans, one of which already cleared the House in October, stand a much greater (though not guaranteed) chance of passing than the kind of proposal debated this morning. In states from Ohio to Arkansas, Republican governors have balked at the idea of trying to restrict access this early; even some anti-abortion hardliners see this kind of legislation as counterproductive to the cause of restricting legal abortion.